Posted on 12/10/2017 11:41:27 AM PST by shove_it
Navy dumped them in the 90’s for the Beretta 9. 6 pack of 1911s for a hundred bucks back in the day...end up with 2 working well out of the parts with lots of spares. Never could get the big white numbers off the grips tho... ;)
Gun store prices for them now? I’ll pass.
Why purchase a used M1911 when you can buy a brand new Kimber? Firing a Kimber is an experience by itself. The workmanship is flawless and truly eye-candy.
Bought a Luger for $40 in 1963. Had it delivered in a brown paper bag through the mail. Bought my first box of 9mm ammo at Toomer’s corner and took it to the Opelika dump to shoot and empty a few magazines.
Yes, it was a totally different world.
Yep, it’s real. Max of 10,000 per year. There are a few hoops you have to jump through and only one per person per year. After they receive them it will be approximately 5 months before they have a sufficient quantity inventoried, graded, and inspected to open up sales. All sales by mail order only, no phone or website orders.
The number was more like 56,000 and Congress passed a law in early 96 preventing the destruction of serviceable M1s.
LOL!
Agree on all points.....
Would you trade the first sex you had for the last sex you had? I love 1911s and have several, but there are better weapons, I no longer carry a 1911. Yes there are better weapons than the 1911 but that was my first love and with the new ammunition available it will really hurt you.
I saw one,years ago, that had been run through a de-mill press. It was horrible! I wanted to cry. So did every one else who saw the results.
Back in 1979 I was on duty in the Armory at an Air Force Base in The Republic of Korea.At the time we had a few Army troops visiting our base and they were required to store their weapons in the armory when they were off duty.
Needless to say I was required to sign the weapons in and when I was handed the individual 1911 Pistols,All manufactured during the Second World War,I found that the parts were very loose.When I shook the pistol I could he the slide shaking.
I always wondered how accurate those pistols were when their parts were so loose.
I wonder to this day if the U.S.Army went and modified those pistols since that time.
To purchase the weapon as a collectors Item is One thing.but to think its a suitable combat weapon is something else again.
You can go through my reply history and track down the thread where people were particularly nasty to me :)
They are such jackasses. They can say that all they want but when it gets to court either it IS a machine gun or it IS NOT a machine gun, and the definition is pretty clear. I would like to see the look on an ATF agents face when you walk in with a bumper from a Toyota Camry and ask them if it's still a machine gun.
Now, if they had just made the M14 available......
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$85.00 each.
The pistols are expected to be in all kinds of condition, from practically unfired, to unserviceable and useful for parts only. If any Singers show up, I expect them to go straight to auction. The CMP has always been generous on their grading and prices have been consistently 15-25% below market.
During my service I saw a few 1911’s made by Remington-Rand and I swear I recall one made by IBM.
Though that’s 40+ years ago and the mind could be playing tricks on me.
It is. IBM made M1 carbines during WWII, not M1911A1 pistols. The WWII M1911A1 contractors were Colt [of course!] Singer [the sewing machine folks, BEAUTIFULLY made, most went to the 8th Air Force or to other manufacturers as tooling/setup examples, though at least one may have been presented to a Russian soldier by President Roosevelt] Remington-Rand [another typewriter maker, Ithaca and railway equipment maker Union Switch and Signal.
IBM made M1 carbines but not M1911A1s.
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